2008 Joint Annual Meeting (5-9 Oct. 2008): N Response of ‘Supersoft' White Winter Wheat in NE Oregon.

747-2 N Response of ‘Supersoft' White Winter Wheat in NE Oregon.



Wednesday, 8 October 2008: 8:45 AM
George R. Brown Convention Center, 360F
Steven Petrie, PO Box 370, Oregon State University, Columbia Basin Ag Res Ctr., Pendleton, OR 97801
Millers and bakers prefer soft white winter wheat grain protein levels to be relatively low (<10%) and there are often premiums available for low protein grain (<8%). The Oregon State University Wheat Breeding Program has developed a ‘supersoft’ white winter wheat variety with lower grain protein and superior end-use functionality. Nitrogen fertilizer recommendations are based, in part, on yield and grain protein goals so there were questions about the most appropriate N rate to recommend that would achieve maximum yield without adversely increasing grain protein. The objectives of this research were to evaluate the effect of increasing N rates on the grain yield, protein, and N uptake of ‘Supersoft’ compared to ‘Stephens’, a standard soft white winter variety. Trials were conducted at the Pendleton (430 mm precipitation) and Sherman (280 mm precipitation) stations of the Columbia Basin Agricultural Research Center in 2005-06 and 2006-07. The trials were seeded after conventional fallow using a Hege small plot drill. Preplant N was applied as urea at rates from 0 to 168 kg N ha-1 in 34 kg increments. Treatments were arranged in a randomized complete block design with four replications. Standard production practices were used in all trials. The plots were harvested with a Wintersteiger plot combine and grain yield and protein were measured. N uptake in the grain was calculated from the grain yield and protein values. Increasing N application rate increased grain yield, grain protein, and grain N uptake in all trials; ‘Stephens’ produced greater yields than ‘Supersoft’, higher grain protein, and more N uptake than ‘Supersoft’ in all trials.